A recanvass of the Kentucky Democratic primary results confirmed that Hillary Clinton is the winner of the contest, Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes announced on Thursday.

"The unofficial winner of Kentucky's Democratic presidential primary remains Hillary Clinton," Grimes said at a press conference on Thursday. "The recanvass vote totals which were submitted to my office today will become the official vote totals. The Kentucky Board of Elections will certify on May 31st."

On election night, Grimes said, the unofficial vote count found "there was a 1924 [vote] difference between Hillary Clinton and Sen. Sanders."

The recanvass results found that Clinton still was ahead of Sanders, this time by 1911 votes, Grimes said.

The difference between the initial and final results was because four counties made corrections to the results they reported on election night. The changes, according to Grimes' office, was because of an absentee ballot voting discrepancy in two counties and changes in two other counties.

The recanvass findings by Grimes followed Sen. Bernie Sanders' campaign's call for a review of the May 17 election results.

Grimes, a Clinton supporter, had called the race for Clinton on election night even though the Associated Press deemed the contest too close to call.

The recanvass was a review of voting machines and absentee ballots in all 120 of the state's counties.

In a statement, the Vermont senator said he accepted the results.

"We accept the results in Kentucky. We are very pleased that we split the delegates in a state with a closed primary in which independents cannot vote and where Secretary Clinton defeated Barack Obama by 35 points in 2008," Sanders said in a statement.

Hillary Clinton and Elizabeth Warren sound like they are singing the same song on Donald Trump, but a top aide for the Clinton campaign said Wednesday that the unified message against the presumptive Republican nominee does not mean they are working from the same playbook.

"Well I don't think it is about coordination," chief Clinton pollster and strategist Joel Benenson said when asked about the similarities on CNN's "New Day."

Clinton's campaign released an ad Tuesday calling out Trump for remarks from the last decade in which he appeared to delight in the prospect of the housing market crashing for his personal gain before the recession.

During remarks later in the day, Warren trashed Trump for his comments, while using similar talking points. When co-host Alisyn Camerota noted that Trump was "seemingly rooting" for a housing crash, Benenson was more blunt.

"He wasn't seemingly saying it. He not only said it, he doubled down on it last night. He said that's what I'm supposed to do," Benenson said. " Well, when you're president of the United States, no, you're not. And it’s a track record he has of putting himself first, enriching himself at the expense of others. You go back and look at his most colossal bankruptcies, which happened in a casino, he lost money on a casino where the odds are in the house’s favor. He got out of that deal fine, but the people that didn’t were the small business contractors who were doing work on that casino. The workers who got a dollar on a penny."

Benenson continued, "Donald Trump has always been in it for himself. His comments on the housing crisis are outrageous. To think you're running for president and should be enriching yourself at the expense of average people who are losing their homes. It’s frankly a complete disgrace."

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Bernie Sanders' campaign manager Jeff Weaver said that aside from a handful of media members, there has been no pressure from the Democratic party calling for the Vermont senator to leave the 2016 race.

Forget what you read about in the press, Bernie Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver said Wednesday — the Democratic senator is receiving "zero" pressure from Democrats and party officials to get out of the race.

Appearing on "Fox & Friends," Weaver was asked to rate on a scale of one to 10 the amount of pressure the campaign is feeling to leave the race so the party can unify behind Hillary Clinton.

"One being the low? So, it would be a one. There really is not a lot," Weaver said. "I mean there are a few people out in the media, but in terms of any kind of real effort, it's probably zero, really, is more like it."

Clinton's allies in the Senate have been careful to not explicitly call on Sanders to get out of the race, all the while reminding their Vermont colleague of the stakes in a general election with Donald Trump.

Despite Weaver saying that Democrats and party officials have not been trying to force out his candidate, he had more sharp words for Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, ticking through a list of grievances and perceived slights to the campaign throughout the primary process.

"I think it has become sort of personal and I think that's really unfortunate because really Democrats should be working together to bring the party together after the convention," Weaver said. "That's for sure."

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Hillary Clinton should reconsider her refusal to debate Bernie Sanders in a Fox News-sponsored debate ahead of the June 7 primaries, Bill O'Reilly said Tuesday evening, because it would provide the former secretary of state an opportunity to "stick up for capitalism" in the face of her democratic socialist opponent.

"There is no question that economic issues will be foremost in the upcoming presidential election," the Fox host said at the start of "The O'Reilly Factor."

That, he continued, is why the Clinton campaign's announcement that it would not follow Sanders in accepting an invitation to debate on the network is a "major mistake for her."

"Sanders, as you know, wants to blow up capitalism, says it's a corrupt system," he told his viewers. "The Vermont senator admires socialism whereby the government calls the shots in the private marketplace. A debate with Sanders on Fox News would give Secretary Clinton a major opportunity to smash that theory, to stick up for capitalism and perhaps persuade some voters she is not an ardent leftist."

O'Reilly then played a clip of Clinton toward the end of her losing primary battle with Barack Obama in May 2008, telling the editorial board of the Sioux Falls Argus Leader that a candidate "should be willing to debate anytime, anywhere."

Clinton communications director Jennifer Palmieri explained the decision in a statement Monday evening, stating that the campaign believes the candidate's "time is best spent campaigning and meeting directly with voters across California and preparing for a general election campaign that will ensure the White House remains in Democratic hands."

Bernie Sanders spent his Tuesday morning campaigning mere miles from Disneyland, a.k.a. "The Happiest Place on Earth." But the Democratic candidate devoted a portion of his speech to supporters in Anaheim, California, ripping into The Walt Disney Company, or the "Disney corporation," as he referred to it, for unfairly compensating its workers and representing another corporation benefiting from an unjustly rigged economy.

Much as he has with his frequent invocations of Wal-Mart as an example of a rigged economic system, Sanders stared right at the Dumbo in the room.

"Let me just start off and be very blunt. We’re here in Anaheim. Everybody knows the major economic force here in Anaheim is the Disney corporation. Anybody here work for Disney?" Sanders asked. The crowd cheered. Sanders then asked, "Anybody here making a living wage from Disney?" The audience responded with a louder, "No!"

Sanders then boasted, "I’m probably the only politician to come to Anaheim and say this. I use Disney not to pick on Disney but as an example of what we are talking about when we talk about a rigged economy."

"Here in Anaheim and the surrounding areas, Disney pays its workers wages that are so low that many of them are forced to live in motels because they can't afford a decent place to live," Sanders said, as the crowd booed. "Meanwhile Disney made a record-breaking profit of nearly $3 billion last quarter." (Disney's $2.9 billion profit came in the first fiscal quarter of 2016 reported in January; in its most recent report of the second quarter on May 10, the company reported earnings of $2.1 billion.)

At Walt Disney World in Florida, Sanders noted, the company replaced 250 workers with low-wage foreign workers through H-1B visas. "Meanwhile the CEO of Disney made $46.5 million in total compensation last year," Sanders said, as the crowd booed again. "That is what we're talking about in a rigged economy."

Disney CEO Robert Iger made $46.5 million in 2014, however; in 2015, he earned a total of $44.9 million.

"Mr. Sanders clearly doesn’t have his facts right," Suzi Brown, a spokeswoman for Disneyland said in a statement to POLITICO. "The Disneyland Resort generates more than $5.7 billion annually for the local economy, and as the area’s largest employer has added more than 11,000 jobs over the last decade, a 65% increase. These numbers don’t take into account our $1 billion expansion to add a Star Wars-themed land, which will create thousands of additional jobs across multiple sectors."

The company also contested Sanders' remarks about laying off workers at Walt Disney World. “Here are the facts: We rehired more than 100 people impacted by our Parks IT reorganization, have hired more than 170 other US IT workers roles and are currently recruiting candidates to fill more than 100 IT positions," a Disney spokesman said.

Bernie Sanders unveiled an expanded list of Democrats he's helping to raise funds for through his national fundraising list.

The Vermont senator's campaign on Tuesday sent an email to his fundraising list boosting eight statehouse candidates around the country.

The candidates are South Carolina state Rep. Justin Bamberg in South Carolina, Wisconsin state Rep. David Bowen, South Dakota House candidate Clara Hart, South Carolina state Rep. Terry Alexander, Illinois state Rep. Carol Ammons, California state Senate candidate Jane Kim, Colorado state Rep. Joe Salazar, and Vermont state Rep. Chris Pearson, who's running for state Senate.

“The leaders we’re raising money for today are the members of Congress, senators and presidential candidates of tomorrow," Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver said in a statement.

The new slate of candidates Sanders is fundraising for is in addition to four congressional candidates he's already assisting: Lucy Flores in Nevada, Pramila Jayapal in Washington, Zephyr Teachout in New York, and Tim Canova in Florida, who's challenging Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz.

The request for a review of the total vote comes one week after Kentucky's Democratic primary contest where former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton claimed victory in the contest with a narrow lead of 1,924 votes over Sanders out of 454,573 total votes, according to the Associated Press.

Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes, a Clinton supporter, called the race for Clinton on Tuesday night even though the Associated Press deemed the contest too close to call.

The Vermont senator's campaign will ask Grimes' office to review absentee ballots and the voting machines in all of Kentucky's 120 counties.

Sen. Bernie Sanders did not begin his speech on the night of the Democratic primaries in Kentucky and Oregon declaring victory in either state.

Instead he said that he expected to come out of the Kentucky primary with as many delegates from the state as former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

"In a closed primary, something I am not all that enthusiastic about where independents are not allowed to vote," Sanders said during his speech in Carson, California, "where Secretary Clinton defeated Barack Obama by 250,000 votes in 2008, it appears tonight that we're going to end up with about half of the delegates."

The comments by Sanders came after Clinton declared victory in Kentucky's closed primary even though the race had not been officially called.

"This is in a sense the beginning of the final push to win California," Sanders said, pointing to California's primary on June 7. Sanders and his top aides have said they expected the Vermont senator to perform well in the state, even as his campaign has let go of top staffers there.

"I should tell you, there's a lot of people out there, many pundits and politicians out there who say 'Bernie Sanders should drop out, the people of California should not have the right to determine who the next president will be.'" Sanders said, sparking boos from the crowd. "Well let me be as clear as I can be, I agree with you. We are in till the last ballot."

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"Unfortunately, the senator's response was anything but acceptable. It certainly did not condemn the supporters for the violence and added more fuel to the fire," Debbie Wasserman Schultz said. | Getty

Democratic National Committee Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz panned Bernie Sanders' response to reports of violence at the Nevada Democratic state convention over the weekend, calling it "anything but acceptable."

Wasserman Schultz was speaking on CNN on Tuesday night, after a day in which the Sanders campaign exchanged pointed public statements with the DNC and the Nevada Democratic Party over allegations that the campaign encouraged "extra-parliamentary behavior — indeed, actual violence" at the convention, in the words of the state Democratic Party.

The DNC chairwoman was asked whether she had spoken with Sanders on Tuesday about the convention. She said she had not but that Sanders' 10-minute discussion with Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) was sufficient.

"I was comfortable that one conversation was enough," Wasserman Schultz said during the interview. "Unfortunately, the senator's response was anything but acceptable. It certainly did not condemn the supporters for the violence and added more fuel to the fire."

After the DNC and the Nevada Democratic Party said that Sanders needed to publicly denounce his supporters' conduct at the convention, the Vermont senator accused party leaders of favoring Clinton's campaign over his.

"If the Democratic Party is to be successful in November, it is imperative that all state parties treat our campaign supporters with fairness and the respect that they have earned," Sanders said in his statement.

Chaos ensued Saturday in Nevada after Sanders supporters became incensed at the idea that the senator was being treated unfairly in the delegate allocation process.

Hillary Clinton claimed a victory of sorts Tuesday night before the final results were tallied in Kentucky, ending her eight-state losing streak in counties bearing her married last name.

Clinton won Clinton County, Kentucky, with 151 votes to Bernie Sanders' 93, with all 13 precincts in the sparsely populated county on the Tennessee border reporting.

The result reverses a months-long trend that began with a narrow 2-point loss in the Iowa caucuses. The losing streak continued in counties named Clinton in Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, New York, Missouri, Pennsylvania and Indiana on May 3.

Bernie Sanders' campaign manager unequivocally said on Tuesday that there would be no violence or serious conflict at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia in July, while also describing the chaos at last Saturday’s Nevada Democratic convention as an "aberration."

"There's not going to be any violence in Philadelphia, Wolf, I guarantee that," Jeff Weaver said in an interview with CNN's Wolf Blitzer. "We hope for a fair and orderly convention. I think whoever the ultimate nominee is we want to unify the party on the back of the convention so we can all go out and defeat Donald Trump in the fall."

Weaver's comments come in the wake of a tumultuous state convention in Las Vegas over the weekend which Sanders supporters sought to derail the event out of frustration over the delegate allocation process. Some participants at the event focused their ire on Nevada Democratic Party Chairwoman Roberta Lange, posting her phone number online, which resulted in a flood of death threats.

"What happened in Nevada, I think, is an aberration in large part driven by the way that that party handled itself," Weaver continued. "We've been involved in conventions all across this country, in states from one end of the country to the other. Nothing like this has happened and so this is really anomalous, but this is really tied to what happened in Nevada itself."

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“Well, he certainly has said that he will do everything — he will work seven days a week, night and day, to make sure Donald Trump is not president, and I'm confident that he will do that,” Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver told CNN. | AP Photo

Bernie Sanders will work around the clock to make sure Donald Trump is not elected president, regardless of whether the Vermont senator wins the Democratic presidential nomination, his campaign manager said Tuesday.

“Well, he certainly has said that he will do everything — he will work seven days a week, night and day, to make sure Donald Trump is not president, and I'm confident that he will do that,” Sanders campaign manager Jeff Weaver told CNN. “Bernie Sanders, as you know, is a very effective campaigner on the stump.”

Weaver said Sanders has rallied millions of people, including young voters, independents and working-class people.“And I think he'll take the message to them that Donald Trump would be a disaster for working-class and middle-class families in this country,” Weaver continued. “Putting the Republicans back in control of Washington is not a good strategy.”

Trump tweeted again Monday morning that Sanders should run as an independent.

“Bernie Sanders is being treated very badly by the Dems. The system is rigged against him,” Trump wrote. “He should run as an independent! Run Bernie, run.”

But despite the reported chaos in Nevada regarding delegate selections last weekend, Weaver insisted Trump’s assertion that the system is rigged against Sanders was wrong and reiterated that Sanders will not run as a third-party candidate and will support the nominee.

“And that’s what he’s gonna do,” Weaver said. “Trump obviously would like a third-party candidate on the left so that he could try to divide the vote and win. But I think what you're gonna see is unity to defeat Trump.”

He also suggested that the Sanders campaign is helping Clinton by refusing to bow out of the race early because they’re focusing on the issues that matter to voters.

“You know, as soon as this Democratic primary process is over, we're not gonna hear any more talk about the minimum wage. We’re not gonna hear any more talk about making college affordable or providing health care to everybody,” Weaver said. “It’s gonna be a mudslinging contest. The Trump people, the Republican Party, all their super PACS, are gonna engage in character assassination no matter who the nominee is, and that’s what it’s gonna be focused on. It’s unfortunate, but as long as there a Democratic primary process going on, people are talking about issues that are important not only to Democrats but to Americans as a whole.”